> Mittwoch, 29. September 2004 15:26 Uhr Mirko Kranenburg > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > >That seems to be a very plausible explanation! > > > >Future releases of DragThing and/or PowerMail should handle > the matter > >more gracefully, though. > >But: the support for PowerMail by Dragthing is in itself a very good > >thing, as way too many apps focus on Mail and Entourage only. > > > >Mirko > > > > > >On Wed, 29 Sep 2004 09:19:11 -0400, C. A. Niemiec > ><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> >>Mine was resolved by switching off DragThing - if you have that > >> >>installed try disabling it. > >> > > >> >What bothers me now: I always thought, that in OSX all the > >> >applications are working in their own areas of the RAM. That fact > >> >that the presence of one affects another app is somewhat > irritating. > >> > >> I thought it was that the newer version of DragThing messages > >> PowerMail to get a count of unread messages in the inbox > to display > >> in its docks, and that disrupts the First Aid recovery somehow. I > >> don't think it interacts any other way. > > > Yes that seems to explain the reason why. BTW DragThing - as > excellent as it is - has another little drawback in > combination with ReadIris 9.0, if someone uses this app too: > when launching ReadIris from DT ReadIris does not display his > working window, the application remains unusable. A normal > launch from finder does not show this problem.
Good idea would be to contact DT's author (James is pretty good at responding). Regards, Alex Newman